U.S. Rep. Mac Thornberry, Chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, delivers opening remarks during a House Armed Services Committee hearing on Capitol Hill (Sgt. James K. McCann/U.S. Army)

WASHINGTON — The chairman of the House Armed Services Committee has targeted most Pentagon support agencies for a 25 percent cut, proposing seven be shuttered entirely.

If adopted, it could lead to thousands of defense civilian job cuts and massive changes for defense contractors.

Texas Republican Rep. Mac Thornberry announced the proposal, aimed at eliminating bureaucratic waste to reap more than $25 billion to reinvest in war fighting. The moves come after he and other pro-defense lawmakers won a two-year budget deal that boosts defense to $700 billion in fiscal 2018 and $716 in fiscal 2019.

The proposal netted swift condemnation as "foolish and shortsighted" from the American Federation of Government Employees, which represents 700,000 workers in the federal government.

"Proposing across-the-board budget cuts and eliminating agencies that support the war fighter is counterproductive to our national security mission and disruptive to the lives of civilian employees, many of whom are veterans, whose jobs could be eliminated if Congress approves these cuts," said AFGE National President David Cox.

Recently, Thornberry unveiled at a news conference legislative language aimed at taming what he sees as uncontrolled growth within the Defense Department's "fourth estate" agencies, which are supported by 200,000 civilian personnel and 600,000 contractors, at a cost of more than $100 billion per year.

"All of the savings and efficiency have to stay within DoD to get more capability into the war fighter faster," Thornberry said. "To summarize the whole thing from my perspective, it is reduce the overhead to put more resources at the tip of the spear."

Washington Headquarters Services, which provides operational and administrative services to the DoD. Hiring a senior executive service employee through the agency, Thornberry argued, "is considered a success if it takes less than nine months."

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The proposal is not law, but draft language intended for the 2019 National Defense Authorization Act which is due to be marked up in full committee next month — and later reconciled with the Senate's expected version of the NDAA.

The cuts, if adopted, would not take effect for two years. DoD's chief management officer would gain new service secretary-like authorities over the agencies and submit a plan by March 1, 2020, to execute the cuts by Jan. 1, 2021.

DoD combat-support and intelligence agencies would be exempt from the proposed cuts. That includes the Defense Intelligence Agency, the Defense Health Agency, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency and the National Security Agency.

At the news conference, Thornberry defended likely cuts to the civilian and contractor workforces as an attempt to streamline Pentagon decision-making. He cited more than 20 agencies that have input into the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States as an example of DoD redundancy run amok.

"I'm going to try to get rid of one of them because I don't think we need 20," he said. "Is it possible that the civilians who work for that agency feel like their job is threatened? Yes, I understand, but we have to speed up decision-making and have accountability."

The moves, he said, are consistent with his and the new Defense Department leadership's commitment to getting better value for taxpayers and make DoD more agile.

"I'm not saying they endorse all this stuff by any stretch, but I do think we are trying to swim in the same direction," he said, adding that he wanted to spark a discussion with the DoD's own internal reform cell.

Asked whether he was concerned by the cultural change he was seeking by merging DISA and Cyber Command, Thornberry said: "If I'm not making somebody nervous, I'm not doing anything."

"We have to have a culture that is willing to be disruptive if we're going to adequately defend the nation," Thornberry said.

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